Audiobook: Passenger Pigeon
- Download Introduction audio
- Download My Boyhood Among the Pigeons audio
- Download The Passenger Pigeon - from American Ornithology by Alexander Wilson audio
- Download The Passenger Pigeon - from Ornithological Biography by John James Audubon audio
- Download As James Fenimore Cooper Saw It audio
- Download The Wild Pigeon of North America - by Chief Pokagon in The Chautauquan audio
- Download The Passenger Pigeon - from Life Histories of N. American Birds by Charles Bendire audio
- Download Netting the Pigeons - by William Brewster in The Auk audio
- Download Efforts to Check the Slaughter by Prof. H. B. Roney audio
- Download The Pigeon Butcher's Defense - by E. T. Martin in American Field audio
- Download Notes of a Vanished Industry audio
- Download Recollections of Old Timers audio
- Download The Last of the Pigeons audio
- Download What Became of the Wild Pigeon? by Sullivan Cook in Field and Stream audio
- Download A Novel Theory of Extinction by C.H. Ames and Robert Ridgway audio
- Download News From John Burroughs audio
- Download The Pigeon in Manitoba - by George E. Atkinson audio
- Download The Passenger Pigeon in Confinement - by Ruthven Deane in The Auk audio
- Download Nesting Habits of The Passenger Pigeon - by Dr. Morris Gibbs in The Oologist audio
- Download Miscellaneous Notes audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
"For the last three years I have spent most of my leisure time in collecting as much material as possible which might help to throw light on the oft-repeated query, 'What has become of the wild pigeons?' ... I am merely a business man who is interested in the Passenger Pigeon because he loves the outdoors and its wild things, and sincerely regrets the cruel extinction of one of the most interesting natural phenomena of his own country. ... It is hard for us of an older generation to realize that as recently as 1880 the Passenger Pigeon was thronging in countless millions through large areas of the Middle West. ... They were slain by the millions during the middle of the last century, and from one region in Michigan in one year three million Passenger Pigeons were killed for market. ... The American people are wasteful. They are just beginning to learn the need of economy in the use of that which Nature has flung at their feet." (from the Introduction to The Passenger Pigeon by William B. Mershon, 1907)
On September 1, 1914, just seven years after Mershon's book was published, the last known passenger pigeon died at the Cincinnati Zoo.
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